Bioenergy Services In Arkansas
-
based in USA
Waste-to-Energy Waste-to-Energy encompasses a wide range of technologies and processes. Examples of wastes used to produce energy include biomass, municipal solid waste (MSW), food wastes, tires, and chemical wastes. Processes include waste segregation, anaerobic digestion, incineration, pyrolysis, and gasification. Waste-to energy projects have two process goals – diverting waste from ...
-
based in USA
Trinity recognizes the unmistakable connection between energy efficiency and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions mitigation. Our climate change specialists assist industrial organizations in developing energy management strategies and implementing cost-saving measures to improve operational efficiency while lowering GHG emissions. Our interdisciplinary team analyzes the technical, economic, and ...
-
based in USA
Biodiesel is an alternative fuel made from a number of different feedstocks – vegetable oils (such as soybean and canola oil), animal fats (such as beef tallow and chicken fat), waste cooking oils, and a host of others. Two chemical processes – esterification and transesterification – combine these fats/oils with methanol, and a caustic catalyst like sodium hydroxide, to create ...
-
based in USA
Torrefaction of biomass is best described as a low temperature pyrolysis where the organic material, typically wood, is heated in the absence of oxygen, producing a dry product with no biological activity like rotting. Torrified biomass is combined with coal to reduce emissions and increase the renewable fuel fraction of the power ...
-
based in USA
Pyrolysis refers to the decomposition or transformation of a compound caused by heat. Pyrolysis and gasification are two related process, differing mostly by temperature and process reactants. As discussed in other sections, low temperature pyrolysis can be used to produce various products including torrefied wood, biochar and biocarbon. High temperature pyrolysis is used for converting waste ...
-
based in USA
Biochar is a name for charcoal when it is used for particular purposes. Like all charcoals, biochar is created by pyrolysis of biomass. Specifically, biochar is produced from wood, using a higher temperature pyrolysis process as compared to the temperatures used for torrefaction and biocarbon production – 400⁰C to 500⁰C. Biochar is used in agricultural applications as a soil ...
-
based in USA
Carbonization refers to the conversion of an organic substance into either carbon or a carbon-containing residue through pyrolysis or distillation. Above 300οC, carbonization of biomass commences and the thermochemical reactions become exothermic (i.e., heat generating) which drives the higher-temperature pyrolysis with no (or little) external energy being applied. Biomass undergoes major ...
-
based in USA
Butanol is a four carbon straight chain primary alcohol which has gained enormous attention as a potential gasoline substitute in recent years. This is due to its high energy density, low vapor pressure, low heat of vaporization and high hydrophobicity. These promising physical and chemical properties of butanol make it suitable for blending with or direct substitution of gasoline. Biobutanol can ...
-
based in USA
Ethanol is a renewable, domestically produced transportation fuel. It is a clear, colorless liquid, also known as known as ethyl alcohol. For use as a renewable fuel, ethanol is made from corn and other plant materials. It has the same chemical structure regardless of whether produced from starch- and sugar-based feedstocks, such as corn grain (as it primarily is in the United States), sugar cane ...
-
based in USA
Gasification is a process that converts organic or fossil based carbonaceous materials into carbon monoxide, hydrogen and carbon dioxide. Pyrolysis and gasification are related processes differing mostly in temperature and process reactants with gasification conducted at significantly higher temperatures than pyrolysis (1000⁰C to 1200⁰C and higher). Gasification thermally decomposes ...
-
based in USA
Cellulosic ethanol is an alcohol made from biomass such as wood and agricultural residues (instead of the starches which are used to produce corn/grain ethanol). The difference between starch and cellulosic ethanol start with the plants. In the United States, starch ethanol is made from corn kernels. Cellulosic ethanol, however, starts with cellulose, the most abundant carbon-containing material ...
-
PremiumManufactured by Solar Turbines Incorporatedbased in USA
Meeting your needs with custom service solutions. Solar offers full life cycle support through our Long Term Service Agreements for the entire range of customer services capabilities.Equipment Health Management:Integral to our oil and gas service agreement philosophy, our customers maximize uptime and lower life cycle costs with Solar's state of the art Insight Platform ...
-
based in USA
EFI has positioned itself as the leader in both Ambient Temperature and Mesophilic Lagoon Cover Anaerobic Digestion Systems. Leveraging our expertise in the installation of geosynthetics, EFI has successfully completed hundreds of projects around the world and continues to innovate in this ...
-
Manufactured by Carus Corporationbased in USA
CARULITE 300 catalysts are used to effectively destroy carbon monoxide in compressed breathing air, respirators, escape masks, and in cryogenic gas purification. The versatility and effectiveness of CARULITE 300 catalysts make it the benchmark technology for removal of deadly carbon monoxide from compressed breathing air sources. It also provides for removal of carbon monoxide in ...
Need help finding the right suppliers? Try XPRT Sourcing. Let the XPRTs do the work for you